Stock Under the Definition of Securities—Adoption of a Rebuttable Presumption That Stock Used to Acquire Greater Than Fifty Percent Interest in a Corporation Is Not a Security as Defined by the Securities Acts, Sutter v. Groen
Author:
Thomas K. Lammert Jr.
(Washington University School of Law)
Development
Stock Under the Definition of Securities—Adoption of a Rebuttable Presumption That Stock Used to Acquire Greater Than Fifty Percent Interest in a Corporation Is Not a Security as Defined by the Securities Acts, Sutter v. Groen
Author:
Thomas K. Lammert Jr.
(Washington University School of Law)
Lammert Jr.,
T.
(1983) 'Stock Under the Definition of Securities—Adoption of a Rebuttable Presumption That Stock Used to Acquire Greater Than Fifty Percent Interest in a Corporation Is Not a Security as Defined by the Securities Acts, Sutter v. Groen',
Washington University Law Review.
61(2)
:659-672.
Lammert Jr.,
T.
Stock Under the Definition of Securities—Adoption of a Rebuttable Presumption That Stock Used to Acquire Greater Than Fifty Percent Interest in a Corporation Is Not a Security as Defined by the Securities Acts, Sutter v. Groen. Washington University Law Review. 1983 1;
61(2)
:659-672.
Lammert,
T.
(1983, 1 1). Stock Under the Definition of Securities—Adoption of a Rebuttable Presumption That Stock Used to Acquire Greater Than Fifty Percent Interest in a Corporation Is Not a Security as Defined by the Securities Acts, Sutter v. Groen.
Washington University Law Review
61(2)
:659-672.